• • Community Shows Support of WSU with Grant Aid A record number of gifts to Wayne State University—total- ing $4,724,000—was reported for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1959, according to figures re- leased this week by the univer- sity. The report, which occupies some 65 printed pages, indicates that individual members of the Jewish community and founda- tions and businesses they repre- sent contributed substantially to the total. The Jewish community is par- ticularly well represented in the areas of research and in- struction grants, gifts for stu- dent aid, capital gifts and sup- port to the WSU libraries, Uni- versity Press and Wayne Uni- versity Foundation. Among the top gifts was a $20,000 grant from the Alexan- der Freeman Foundation to es- tablish a trust fund, the income from which is to be used "to support projects for the ad- vancement of man's knowledge or well-being." Another grant was from Tem- ple Beth El for its annual Leo M. Franklin Memorial Chair in Human Relations. The $2,800 gift brings to the university top-level speakers, 'under a ro- tating chair granted each year to a different WSU faculty member. The growth of the Semitics department to a well-estab- lished department of Near Eastern languages and litera- tures, under the chairmanship of Dr. Abram Spiro, has been made possible by a large number of communal grants. Among the contributors have been Herbert A. Aronsson, Al Borman, Helen L. DeRoy Foun- dation, Feinberg Foundation, Walter L. Field, Max M. Fisher, Arthur Fleischman, Benjamin Frank, Irwin Green, Oscar 0. Jacobson, Dr. S. D. Jacobson, Dr. Morris M. Marks, Louis P. Miller, Max Osnos, Hyman Saf- ran, Joseph, Siegel, Jr., Nathan Leonard eonard N. Simons and Paul Zuckerman. The newest outstanding gift to Wayne State University comes from Torn and Al Bor- an, who are financing the Borman Near Eastern Lec- tures. Other grants for instruction were given by . Dr. M. S. Brent and Brent General Hospital to the college of medicine; friends Christianity's Jewish Heritage Evaluated by Sandmel; Acclaims New Cooperation Between Faiths Report Ike to Ask Religious Equality in Talks with Franco of the late Lillian Weinberger Foundation, The Jewish News for hematology research; and Philip Slomovitz, Leonard Charles E. Feinberg and Ben Kasle, Judge Theodore Levin, ROME (JTA) — The au- Jones for Wayne's Modern Po- Hoke and Maxine Levin Foun- thoritative Italian weekly, etry Week; the Sa'ad Club, a dation, Louis Hinderstein. L'Espresso, reported from grant of $1,250 for research in Others are Robert Levison, Washington that President the department of neurology; a Henry J. Moses, Max Osnos, Eisenhower was expected, $1,000 gift from Leslie R. Charles F. Rosen, David and during his meeting with Schmier for the art education Hyman Safran, Morton L. Schol- Generalissimo Franco, to re- program; and a gift from Sidney nick, Alan E. Schwartz, Theo- quest "that religious free- G. Tickton for records in the dore Schwartz, Abe Shiffman, dom for Protestants and liberal arts music department. King D. Shwayder, Leonard N Jews in Spain be respected." A $350 grant from the De- Simons, Charles H. Gershenson, Several high Catholic pre- troit Chapter of the American Harvey Willens, Stanley J. Win- lates were reported as favor- Jewish Committee was made to kelman and John E. Lurie. ing American intervention in implement a study on changing In addition to providing favor of Spain's religious neighborhoods made under the funds, a significant number of minorities although officially direction of Dr. Albert J. Mayer, Wayne professors and instruc- they take the position of and $500 was given by Mr. and tors in the community have supporting Franco's policies, Mrs. Joseph H. Davidson for been the recipients of these and the weekly said. epilepsy research directed by other grants. Dr. John S. 1V1eyer. The Simons - Michelson Com- pany contributed $500 for ex- perimental research in visual education, under the direction of Dr. Robert J. Goodman, of the college of liberal arts; there * are 52 names of prominent Jews associated with a $2,915 grant for tumor research in the col- lege of medicine, and there is Hundreds of Satisfied Customers an additional gift for the Allan in the Northwest Area! L. Weston Fund for cardiac re- search. We Guarantee Workmanship . . . and In the section titled capital Carry Only the Finest Quality Merchandise. gifts, there is another impres- sive list of community donors * Featuring Such Famous Brand Names as who have helped the develop. ment of the university's pro- • Kentile Products • Renaissance Vinyl gram. Included here are the • • Armstrong Conlon names of Mr. and Mrs. Morton • Armstrong Futuresq Katz, Benjamin I. Dvorman • Armstrong Tessera and More and the Simons-Michelson Co. Grant aid for students has GUARANTEED INSTALLATION been forthcoming through the Dorothy Altman Memorial Stu- Installation Special dent Loan Fund, Maurice Arons- KENTILE ASPHALT TILE son, Harrison Jules, Louis Frank Price includes labor, tile and neces- and Leon Harrison Frank Memo- * sary adhesive for 15x20 area. Corn- rial Corp., Dr. Maurice Franks, * pletely installed friends of Prof. Samuel M. Levin, Morris Mendelson, Mrs. Adele Mondry, National Council of Jewish Women, Arthur L. Robbins Award Fund and E. iVI. Rosenthal. Still more grants have been 5275 SCHAEFER TI 6-3151 provided to the university li- OPEN 9 TO 9 * EXCEPT TUES.AND WED. 9 TO 6.* FREE PARKING braries. Gifts in this category have been received from the Herbert L. Goodman Memorial MNIMINI11116 Fund and Prof. Boaz Siegel. Books to the libraries have been contributed by the Ameri- can Zionist Committee for Pub- lic Affairs, the Israel Embassy and Israel Office of Informa- tion: A number of significant grants have been given to the Wayne State University Press. Among these is a $250 sub- sidy by Charles E. Feinberg to help underwrite publica- tion of *a "Walt Whitman Re- view." Other funds have been receiv- ed from numerous individuals and firms they repr es ent. Among these are Herbert A. Aronsson, Louis Berry Founda- tion, Herbert G. Blumberg, Richard Jacob, Avern Cohn, Helen L. DeRoy Foundation, Louis M. Ellirhan, Lawrence A. Fleischman, Henry B. Frank, Irving L. Goldman, Mrs. Samuel Trees are Israel's Silent Army Guarding the Soil, Hamburger, Emanuel J. Harris, Defending the Crops, Subduing the Desert, Creating Irwin Holtzman, Honigman Byproducts of hatred and per- The calendar and the prac- secution that arose out of re- ticed regulations were char- ligious developments, such as acteristic of Jews, but these the rise of Christianity out of regulations, in the mind of Judaism and Protestantism out Paul, could be done without in of Catholicism, were deplored the light of the death and res- by Dr. Sandmel, Provost He- urrection of Jesus. That is brew Union College at Cincin- how, he explained, the regula- nati, in his lecture at Wayne tions listed in Exodus but not . State University Wednesday appearing in Genesis were evening. done away with by the new The noted scholar stated, how- sect. Paul, Prof. Sandmel pointed ever, that in the last 100 years the obstacles to cooperation be- out, was a good Jew who be- tween various faiths have been lieved that the ideal life to live was as Abraham lived before overcome. Speaking on the topic "Juda- the Mosaic laws were pro- ism and Christianity in the First nounced. He said: "What Paul Century," in the first of the was arguing was that the laws series of Borman Near Eastern were no longer valid and need Lectures, Prof. Sandmel showed not be observed." Only such festivals were re- how, for 1850 years, "Jews and Christians remained separated tained by Christians, from the by . barriers which were erected Jewish tradition, which gave a more firmly in the second cen- Christian utility, such as Pass- tury. This separation has been over observed as Easter and overcome in our time and Jews Shavuot celebrated as Pentecost, and Christians now sit next to Dr. Sandmel said. Dr. Sandmel said that each other in a common effort to understand Scriptures bet- the early Christians saw in Christ's death their atonement ter." and that in early Christianity "In the last century," he added, "Jews and Christians man was a sinner by virtue of being a mortal man. In Judaism meet on a level of scholars, and man could atone for himself, in on the level of citizens they Christianity atonement is have overcome the unhappy through Christ. events of the past." Prof. Sandmel gave an inter- Four topics were reviewed esting description of the man- by Dr. Sandmel, who is one of ner in which the letters of the leading American author- the apostles were added to ities on New Testament writ- the Hebrew scriptures to form ings, in . his discussion of his the New Testament. Until the subject: The Community, The year 150, he said, the Scrip- Sacred Calendar, Theological tutes were alike for both Belief and What Is Sacred sects, but the change took Literature? place with the era of Mar- He showed how Christianity con's criticisms and the de- was a movement of Jews by velopments under Tertullian, Re-Try 40 in Morocco Jews, born in Palestine. Jesus, when 27 books forming the he stated, was believed by his New Testament epistles were on Emigration' Charges followers to have been resur- added to Apocryphal writings. CASABLANCA, (JTA)—The rected and therefore was con- Dr. Sandmel was introduced court in Tangier heard . dual ap- sidered in some sense as divine. at the lecture by Leonard N. peals by defendants and pros- Dr. Sandmel emphasized that Simons who evaluated the ecution on Wednesday in the Jesus and his followers, the scholar's literary and rabbinic case of some 40 Jews convicted early, Christians, were Jews in attainments. there in October on charges of tone and coloration. He de- Prof. Abram Spiro, head of having attempted to leave the scribed how the movement of the Near Eastern Department at country illegally or of illegally Christianity was carried by Wayne State University, opened abetting emigration. these Jews into the Greek world the lecture program by indicat- The defendants, many of among the gentiles, "and as the ing that it inaugurated the Bor- whom had spent months in jail gentiles came into the move- man Lecture Series. He an- awaiting trial, are seeking to ment the factor of Jewish an- nounced a series of lectures reverse their . conviction. The cestry was either forgotten or through May. prosecuting attorney is appeal- ignored and the movement be- At a dinner in 'Dr. Sandmel's ing to the court to re-sentence came gentile." honor, preceding the lecture the convicted men and women When Christianity w a s Rabbi Morris Adler commended on the grounds that the sen- born, the lecturer said, it Tom and Al Borman for having tences imposed by the court added to the normal Jewish made the lecture series possible last month were not sufficiently calendar_certain_gaere_ddaivq_ with th r an y ■ n_r e niFla • BEFORE YOU ORDER ANY 4- TILE or LINOLEUM BE SURE TO SEE US! * * * 9 5 .■ ISRAEL PLANTS TREES AS A SYMBOL OF HER HOPES Agricultural Self-Sufficiency. PLANT TREES IN ISRAEL IN THE NAME Of YOUR LOVED ONES Honor family and friends by planting trees in their names .. . Perpetuate the memory of family and friends . . . Celebrate Bar Mitzvah . . . honor any happy event by planting trees in the forests and fields of Israel! 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